Cambridgeshire County Council – Live Streaming and Publishing Votes

In a first for me I’m going to be debated at Cambridgeshire County Council’s full council on Tuesday the 25th of March 2014.

A motion submitted by East Chesterton’s Councillor Ian G Manning, on filming council meetings, asks the council to note:

Local blogger Richard Taylor recently demonstrated at Cambridge City Council how easy it is to do this via YouTube, a Laptop and the public wireless

The full motion states:

This Council
notes:

  • The Council’s commitment to transparent decision making
  • Oral recordings of Full Council meetings are now made available publicly on the County Council website
  • Many Councillors tweet live from the Council Chamber during the meeting, allowing Cambridgeshire residents to follow decisions made
  • Many other Councils also provide live streamed video recordings of Council meetings
  • The software that is used for electronic voting is already configured to record the individual votes of all Councillors

Further, in the case of video recording & streaming, Council notes:

  • Local blogger Richard Taylor recently demonstrated at Cambridge City Council how easy it is to do this via YouTube, a Laptop and the public wireless
  • A member of the communications team or democratic services already present at Full Council could carry out camera operation
  • That, given the previous two bullet points, this should not incur additional costs to the Council

To improve the transparency of local Government, Council resolves to:

  • implement a live video feed and resolves to set this up via the quickest possible method by the next Full Council meeting;

asks the Constitution and Ethics Committee to amend the current & new constitution, in operation from 13th May 2014, to have the individual voting records of Councillors published on the Council’s website.

My View

Cambridgeshire County Council is already very accessible to those wishing to record, report on, and publicise what souncillors are doing. Agendas carry the following notice:

The County Council is committed to open government and members of the public are welcome to attend this meeting. It supports the principle of transparency and encourages filming, recording and taking photographs at meetings that are open to the public. It also welcomes the use of social networking and micro-blogging websites (such as Twitter and Facebook) to communicate with people about what is happening, as it happens. These arrangements operate in accordance with a protocol agreed by the Chairman of the Council and political Group Leaders which can be accessed via the following link or made available on request: http://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/council/democracy/recordingofmeetings.htm

The council even provides public WiFi. There are though a few minor wrinkles. At one meeting the then vice-Chair of the council, ex councillor John Powley wrongly told me the council maintains a list of accredited media who are given exclusive access to the chairs and desks at the back of the council chamber. Since ignoring ex Cllr Powely I have experienced no subsequent problems using the furniture. The council also requires those attending public meetings to sign in and provide their names; though recently this appears to have been waived for full council meetings.

On voting I have myself obtained a voting record for a full council meeting via a Freedom of Information request; and have published the video of the results of a vote on YouTube. I would like to see the council proactively publishing the votes information in a reusable format.

If I had drafted, or had the opportunity to amend, Cllr Manning’s motion I

  • Would not have used the phrase “the public wireless” it sounds like something from the 1950s involving valves.
  • Would not have been prescriptive and required officers to implement a live video feed. I would like to see officers given the freedom to experiment, see what works, and follow success. That could be posting some snippets on Vine, or on Twitter, it could be experimenting with live feeds via Hangouts on Air, Youtube, or bambuser
  • Would, as Cllr Manning has done, required the proactive publication of vote data; but added that each vote needs to be well described, with links to the motion being voted on. There would also be a need to ensure that the voted recorded electronically are those actually counted (eg. votes would need to be re-run following scandals involving members pressing others’ buttons)

I think it would be excellent to see some of the council’s legions of officers doing more to share how the council operates with the residents of Cambridgeshire. The council currently makes it difficult to follow how councillors make decisions, with information on democracy deep within the council’s website and often accessible only via drop-down menus. Council officers using lots of Microsoft software may not realise a Word document is not the easiest format for many people to deal with.

Cllr Curtis Cites Motion in Resignation Article

The leader of Cambridgeshire County Council has announced his resignation as leader, in his article explaining his decision he states:

I cannot be part of a system that is using its most important meetings to eat up time and money discussing video cameras

Other elements of Cllr Curtis’ reasoning for standing down appear to show a dislike of open and transparent democracy; he opposes a committee system which will see more debate and decision making occurring in public.


6 responses to “Cambridgeshire County Council – Live Streaming and Publishing Votes”

  1. Cllr Curtis has published more of his views on Cllr Manning’s motion:

    Filming at Full Council. We have a motion next week discussing whether to do live webcasts of our Full Council meetings. The motion is correct, in that we could do this at low cost; not no cost, but low cost. All the evidence from elsewhere shows that when Councils webcast very, very few people watch it. There are plenty of informal mechanisms in the Council to raise and discuss this issue, but instead, we have to use one of the most time consuming, most costly meetings of the Council to discuss it. Bearing in mind a Full Council ties up the time of every single elected member, every single one of our most senior managers and many other officers – this discussion, which the evidence suggests there is little public interest about (note “little” not “none” is going to cost you the tax payer thousands and thousands of pounds to debate, whatever the outcome. Be assured, the reason this is being debated in this way is not about you the resident, it is about a few Councillors being able to put a leaflet through a door saying “look what we’ve done!” – a bit of populism that will cost you thousands. Full Council meetings need to discuss the biggest issues of the Council, let’s leave the other issues for elsewhere.

  2. The Minutes of the Cambridgeshire County Council meeting on Tuesday 25 March 2014 show the motion was passed, with a minor amendment (underlined) to the last bullet point:

    • Implement a live video feed and resolves to set this up via the quickest possible method by the next Full Council meeting
    • Ask the Constitution and Ethics Committee to recommend to Council to amend the current and new constitution, in operation from 13th May 2014, to have the individual voting records of Councillors published on the Council’s website.

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